Hicesius

Hicesius (Greek: Ἱκέσιος) was a Greek physician, who lived probably at the end of the 1st century BC, as he is quoted by Crito,[1] and lived shortly before Strabo. He was a follower of Erasistratus, and was at the head of a celebrated medical school established at Smyrna.[2] He is several times quoted by Athenaeus, who says that he was a friend of the physician Menodorus;[3] and also by Pliny, who calls him "a physician of no small authority."[4] There are extant two coins struck in his honour by the people of Smyrna.

Notes

  1. ap. Galen., De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen., v. 3, vol. xiii.
  2. Strabo, xii.
  3. Athenaeus, ii. 59
  4. Pliny, H. N., xxvii. 14
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "article name needed". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
gollark: Are these "hollies" hard to get in the holiday biøme?
gollark: I should start gathering them for the upcoming mint price wars.
gollark: Mints were very rare anyway.
gollark: Mints? Probably not.
gollark: I haven't actually seen many. Have they gotten rarer?
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